Church building

Virgin Mary Queen of the Peace church in Bydgoszcz

Poland Bydgoszcz immovable monument in Poland
Virgin Mary Queen of the Peace church in Bydgoszcz
Virgin Mary Queen of the Peace church in Bydgoszcz · Wikipedia

About

The Bernardine Church of Our Lady Queen of Peace is a historic church from 1557, located in Bernardyńska street, in Bydgoszcz, Poland. Its patron was initially Saint George: in 1971, Polish primate Stefan Wyszyński changed its title to the current one.

The origin of the church dates back to 1480, when the first Bernardine monks arrived in Bydgoszcz, coming from Kraków. The decision to invite Bernardines was made by king Casimir IV Jagiellon, while staying in Bydgoszcz castle during the Thirteen Years' War (1454–1466) against the Teutonic Knights. On December 5, 1480, Wloclawek's bishop Zbigniew Oleśnicki granted the erection of a Bernardine monastery in the city, only the third one in Poland after Kraków's and Warsaw 's. Its main official founders were king Casimir IV Jagiellon, Hińcza of Rogów, Jarand of Pomian and Bydgoszcz's Starost Jan Kościelecki. The latter donated land from his castle for this purpose.

This is how the Polish chronicler Jan Długosz depicted the event:

On the other side of the Brda River, to Kujawy settled down our brothers. A place was given to them with the consent of His Majesty the Polish King Casimir IV Jagiello, His Most Reverend Zbigniew Oleśnicki, bishop of Wloclawek. His episcopal Majesty arrived together with his brother Michał Bal and his brother Stanislaw from Kłobuck, yore a famous of preacher, and two other brothers, designated by order of His Majesty to choose the place according to their taste. Attending also were its highness Jan Kościelecki, governor of Bydgoszcz, (...) There, the brothers chose a place convenient to the monastery as they saw it.

The construction of St. Jerome and St. Francis church has been completed in 1485 and the monastery library in 1488. The original temple was made of brick, as depicted by notes from preserved Bernardine chronicles:

Virgin Mary Queen of the Peace church in Bydgoszcz

- Brothers of the Order after receiving permission for the construction of the convent, performed bricks, prepared lime, (...) cleared the bushes.

Like in other areas, the Bernardine monastery created an outstanding environment for intellectual culture development in the town. From 1518 to 1524, the abbey was led by Bartholomew of Bydgoszcz, a scholar, author of the first Latin-Polish dictionary (1532, 1544). During the 17th century, the abbot, Paweł of Łęczyca, was an active supporter of urban decorations, founder of the extensive gardens of the monastery, which were ancestors of today's Bydgoszcz parks. The Bernardines created the largest library in the city (1919 volumes, partially preserved until today at the municipal library) and established a rhetoric school (1529–1774), an observatory (1677), and a brewery. On August 10, 1545, lightning struck the abbey, causing a fire that burned down the church and a large part of the monastic buildings: the only buildings left were the library, the vestry and the infirmary.

On September 23, 1552, king Sigismund II Augustus granted permission for the reconstruction of the burned Bernardine church, as long as it was not taller than the neighboring castle, for military-defensive purposes. The current architecture dates back to this period, displaying Gothic and Renaissance characteristics. Built between 1552 and 1557 with the financial help of the Kościelecki family, its name was later changed to Holy Trinity Church.

On September 10, 1559, Sebastian of Żydowo, a suffragan bishop of Gniezno, consecrated the Holy Cross altar in the church. In 1563, Herman Benincke, a bell founder from Gdańsk, cast the great bell of the monastery. The vault of the church was designed by Father Marcin of Bieganowo. The reconstruction lasted till 1602, when Stanisław Małżewski, a burgher and nobleman, founded the altar of the Holy Cross in the newly built in the newly erected chapel of Saint Anne on the southern side of the church, which still stands today. In 1595, Dorothy of Spławski, the wife of Jan Kościelecki, the Starost of Bydgoszcz, had the chapel of the convent decorated with polychrome and three green rugs. The Saint Anne Brotherhood altar was erected that same year.

After the Swedish invasions, the ruined church was rebuilt and renovated in the second half of the 17th century:

Virgin Mary Queen of the Peace church in Bydgoszcz

- a gable was placed on the western side;

- in 1677, a square tower was erected, preserved to this day;

- between 1682 and 1685, a chapel was built in the courtyard in front of the church, modeled after the sanctuary in Loreto, to commemorate the Battle of Vienna (1983). Under Prussian rule, seven altars were listed as part of the church, with a rich decor and a collection of liturgical objects. According to a site survey carried out in 1745, the church was covered with tiles, the floor chancel was made of ceramic and the aisles' of wood.

The main altar, consecrated in 1559 and 1606 was covered with gold in 1760-1770: it is dedicated to the Holy Trinity, Mary of Nazareth and to several saints ( Francis of Assisi, Bernardino of Siena, Louis and Bonaventure ).

- Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. In 1605, was set in the choir a pipe organ, founded by two town citizens, Andrzej Grudziński and Daniel Jastrzębski. It was enlarged in 1618 and completely renovated in 1715. It survived until the secularization of the Catholic church decided by Prussian authorities.

Virgin Mary Queen of the Peace church in Bydgoszcz

Church bells were all purchased in the workshop of Herman Bennicek in Gdańsk, in 1563, 1605 and 1618.

Until the end of the 18th century, the crypt was used to bury religious members of the Bernardine Monastery, along with regular people who deserved to be honored by the convent and the church. Most important figures are buried under the floor of the church, including, among others:

- Paweł Koszucki (1609), secretary of the king and Wojski of Poznań, lord of Bartodzieje near Bydgoszcz;

- Mikołaj Jastrzębski (1610), disciple of Bernardine observance;

- Katarzyna Raczyńska (1695), wife of a judge from Nakło nad Notecią ;